The Epic Meal Time game is simialir to Fruit Ninja. Instead of slicing the fruit in half, you have to direct the food into Harley's mouth. Stuff like meat, pizza, burgers, etc = good, veggies = bad (if you've seen the show, it makes sense.) The more money you earn from eating gets your better powerups. I just downloaded it for iPhone, but iPad is definitely the way to go for this game if possible.

Since I bought my iPhone 5 I'm back into phone gaming.ARC squadron....good starfox clone.Minecraft pocket edition....electronic legos.GTA: Vice City....i can't believe the whole ps2 game is on my phone.Crazy Taxi....same as it was on the dreamcast.The Walking Dead:Assault....3/4 top down rts following the story as told in the original graphic novels.

viva la ben wrote:Since I bought my iPhone 5 I'm back into phone gaming.ARC squadron....good starfox clone.Minecraft pocket edition....electronic legos.GTA: Vice City....i can't believe the whole ps2 game is on my phone.Crazy Taxi....same as it was on the dreamcast.The Walking Dead:Assault....3/4 top down rts following the story as told in the original graphic novels.

Whats GTA:VC like.. I debated buying it. Controls good? Good aiming with the shooting? Is it the full ps2 games story and property buying and everything like that? Thanks

viva la ben wrote:Since I bought my iPhone 5 I'm back into phone gaming.ARC squadron....good starfox clone.Minecraft pocket edition....electronic legos.GTA: Vice City....i can't believe the whole ps2 game is on my phone.Crazy Taxi....same as it was on the dreamcast.The Walking Dead:Assault....3/4 top down rts following the story as told in the original graphic novels.

Whats GTA:VC like.. I debated buying it. Controls good? Good aiming with the shooting? Is it the full ps2 games story and property buying and everything like that? Thanks

The radio stations playlists are smaller, other than that it has the same everything as the console re rampages, properties, outfits, and things of that nature. You can select auto aim which makes it a lot easier...controls are on par with most other touchscreen games(sometime tough to navigate close quarters)

Far and away my favorite and most used app. I think I have most all the Hipstapaks available.Another fantastic app for photography is Snapseed. The best photo editing tool around!. Takes a while to figure it all out, but WOW at the results you can get!

Manga -(photography) takes a photo and instantly transforms it into Japanese anime art - but black and white only. Like a pen and ink drawing. You pick a background, then take the pic and there it is.

The Beer app...you can add all the beers you've tried, rate them, write reviews, take photos and even share to a beer community. Great way to track what is and isn't good when you hit the distributor.

Showtimes Movies ... lists all the current movies and times in the area based on your current location. Great for a last minute "let's hit a movie after dinner" ideas.

Starbucks -- just downloaded this one when I saw someone pay at the register by showing their phone. You can load a card on your phone via paypal or a credit/debit card, then pay by tapping at the store based on your location! You add a list of your "favorite" stores and it holds that info for you.

they are really rushing product production it seems. are they hurting that bad from the loss of (steve) jobs?

I think it's more that Jobs understood that scarcity drives a product and would purposely hold back new things till the market was totally flooded with an old product. Then he'd release a finite number of the new product, some people would have it, most wouldn't, and then people would be in a frenzy to get it. Apple's new direction is not following the mantra of you can sheer a sheep many times but skin it only once. They're currently skinning the sheep.

they are really rushing product production it seems. are they hurting that bad from the loss of (steve) jobs?

I don't think the loss of Jobs is what's driving this. I think it's more about accelerating one of Apple's biggest revenue drivers over the last 5 years or so, consumers desire to maintain parity with the latest product introductions.

We all know people like that, maybe they just bought an iPhone 4s in February, but they just had to upgrade to an iPhone 5.

More frequent productr introductions (even if the number of new features is severely limited) means capturing more revenue from folks like that.